The American Institute of Architects Presents Spillman Farmer Architects with Prestigious Silver Medal
BETHLEHEM, Pa., April 4, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Spillman Farmer Architects is pleased to announce that American Institute of Architects (AIA) Pennsylvania has awarded a Silver Medal, the organization's highest honor, to Spillman Farmer Architects for their outstanding design of the ArtsQuest Center at SteelStacks. The Center is a dynamic performing arts, media, and cultural center located on the landmark Bethlehem Steel site in eastern Pennsylvania. The Center lies at the foot of the abandoned Bethlehem Steel blast furnaces, 200-foot industrial ruins that tower above the country's largest privately-owned brownfield. The project represents a new type of hybrid building for the arts. The building is an anchor for the revitalization effort in the City of Bethlehem, transforming a once-abandoned historic industrial core into a dynamic, sustainable, and livable mixed-use community.
Photos can be viewed at
http://www.flickr.com/photos/spillmanfarmer/sets/72157622797378727/with/5497205608
Video of the building is available at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POPD2ZUDcmE&feature=related
AIA jurors praised the project saying, "The design captures the energy and utilitarian beauty that the best of the industrial revolution once offered. At the same time it demonstrates the power that a truly successful marriage of architecture and program can exert in bringing new purpose and hope to the most abandoned parts of our community."
Spillman Farmer Design Principal Joseph N. Biondo responded, saying, "The architecture of the ArtsQuest Center is influenced by its industrial site. It embraces our region and its culture, recognizing the material and human spirit that fueled the industry of this country. It is an honor to be recognized by the AIA for our dedication to craft and human-centered design." Biondo continued, "As a firm, we see this project as an expression of structure, material, and site." The building is wrapped with locally-manufactured pre-cast concrete panels, which are mounted with their rough, hand-screed surface facing outward. The Center's panels celebrate both the process and the people that produced them, by revealing the marks of their production. Inserted within this structural concrete strongbox is a skeletal steel frame that honors the site's steelmaking history. The skeleton is finished in International Orange, an iconic color borrowed from many of Bethlehem Steel's most recognizable fabrication projects, including the Golden Gate Bridge.
Kim I. Plyler
484-554-5582
SOURCE Spillman Farmer Architects
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